William Gordon Drenttel
1953-2013
It is with great sorrow that we announce that William Drenttel, who co-founded Design Observer
ten years ago and was its mastermind, conscience, and animating spirit, died on December 21, 2013, after a year-and-a-half struggle with brain cancer. He was 60 years old.
Bill lived many lives over six decades. It was no accident that his restless imagination often placed himself at the center of an era’s concerns. He was an unlikely
advertising man at the tail end of the “Mad Men” era. With Stephen Doyle and Tom Kluepfel, he helped create one of the
most influential design firms of the 1980s. At
Winterhouse, the studio he founded with Jessica Helfand in the nineties, he worked as a
first-rate designer, an
independent publisher, and a champion of causes from
voting rights to freedom of the press. He anticipated the rise of
social design in the 21st century through his work with the Rockefeller Foundation and Mayo Clinic, and gave substance to the promise of “design thinking” with
classes and case studies for the Yale School of Management. When Bill and Jessica
won the AIGA Medal this year, it was only surprising because it was
so long overdue.
But it was here at Design Observer that the impossibly wide range of his intellect has been truly demonstrated. Although he was never the site’s most prolific writer — he often complained of writer’s block — he worked tirelessly behind the scenes. Bill discovered and encouraged new writers, pioneered new features to better serve our readers, and ceaselessly sought new ways to expand the site’s purview. He was positive that anything could be an appropriate subject for Design Observer’s writers. This reflected his conviction that design had the capacity to help us understand, transform, and improve every aspect of human life. Although over 500 writers have contributed to this site over the last ten years — and although he would have been the first to deny it — Design Observer is, in the end, the product of Bill Drenttel’s vision.
Bill leaves behind his wife and partner, Jessica Helfand; their two wonderful children, Malcolm and Fiona; his father-in-law, William Helfand; and countless heartbroken friends who came to depend on his companionship more than he would ever know. We will miss him, and so will you.